Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Mrinal Datta Chaudhuri

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Other names
  
MDC

Died
  
19 May 2015, Pune

Awards
  
Years active
  
1966–2008

Other name
  
MDC

Mrinal Datta Chaudhuri wwwoutlookindiacompublicuploadsblogsimagesmr

Born
  
January 4, 1934 (age 83) (
1934-01-04
)
Srigauri, Cachar, Assam, India

Occupation
  
Theoretical economistWriterAcademic

Known for
  
Academics in EconomicsWritings

Books
  
Regional Development: Experiences and Prospects in South and Southeast Asia

Mrinal Datta-Chaudhuri (1934–2015), popularly known as MDC, was an Indian theoretical economist, academic and a professor of the Delhi School of Economics. He served as a member many government committees which assisted in bringing the economic reforms of the 1990s and was a member of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. The Government of India awarded him the third highest civilian honour of the Padma Bhushan, in 2005, for his contributions to literature and education.

Contents

Biography

Mrinal Datta-Chaudhuri was born on 4 January 1935 at Srigauri, a small village in Cachar, Assam, in East Bengal of the British India. He did his college education at Shantiniketan where he studied with Amartya Sen, the Nobel Prize winning Indian economist and Sukhamoy Chakraborty, and completed his post graduate education at Presidency College, Calcutta. Receiving a full-paid scholarship to pursue his doctoral studies at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he studied under the guidance of Paul Samuelson, the first American Nobel Laureate in Economics who was later described by the New York Times as the foremost academic economist of the 20th century. The stint at MIT also gave him opportunity to study under Nobel Prize winners such as Robert Solow, Franco Modigliani and Kenneth Arrow and mingle with Joseph Stiglitz and George Akerlof, who would also go on to win Nobel Prize later. He secured his PhD in Economics in 1966 and returned to India the same year to start his career at the Indian Statistical Institute to work for the next two years there as well as at Jadavpur University. He moved to Delhi School of Economics in 1968, reportedly on invitation from K. N. Raj, the author of the introductory chapter of the first Five Year Plan of India, as a professor of Economics and worked there till his superannuation in 1999. During this period, he served as the Head of the Department of Economics from 1974 to 1977 and as the director of the institution from 1986 to 1991. He also served as a visiting professor at University of California, Berkeley, Minnesota University and Harvard University.

Datta-Chaudhuri, a member of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, was credited with several articles which included Market Failures and Government Failures published in the Journal of Economic Perspectives (1990) and contributions to texts such as the 75-page chapter on Interindustry Planning Models for a Multiregional Economy in the book Economy-wide models and development planning. He co-wrote one book, Regional Development Experiences and Prospects in South and Southeast Asia with Louis Lefeber and edited another, Development and Change: Essays in Honour of K. N. Raj. He had close association with Manmohan Singh and when the latter became the Finance Minister of India in 1991 during the economic crisis, Datta-Chaudhuri assisted him in the formulation of many policy decisions and remained a member of the unofficial think-tank during Singh's tenancy as the Finance Minister and later, as the Prime Minister. The Government of India awarded him the civilian honor of the Padma Bhushan in 2005. Towards the later days of his life, he suffered from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and moved to Pune to stay with his brother, Malay Dutta Choudhury. He died, aged 82, on 19 May 2015 reportedly due to cardiac arrest, at his brother's residence, survived by two sons from his second marriage, Timir Datta-Chaudhuri and Mihir Datta-Chaudhuri, his first wife had predeceased him. "He was suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and I convinced him to move to Pune after he underwent a bypass surgery" said his brother Malay.

Trivia

  • Datta-Chaudhuri was known to have had a dislike for the popular Indian political rhetoric, 'But in a country like India....
  • He was reported to have been tall, dark, well-dressed and spoke with a Sylhet-Boston accent.
  • He used to drive around in a Volkswagen Beetle and had a penchant for the card game of Bridge.
  • References

    Mrinal Datta Chaudhuri Wikipedia